The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)-Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials
International human rights - Peacemakers · International human rights Prepared by Catherine...
Transcript of International human rights - Peacemakers · International human rights Prepared by Catherine...
Right to freedom of religion or belief
International human rights
Prepared by
Catherine Morris BA JD LLM
December 2017
Overview of this presentation 1 United nations instruments and treaties
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
The Genocide Convention
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief
2 Strict limitations on the right to freedom of conscience religion or belief
The Siricusa Principles
3 Regional human rights systems
Europe the Americas and Africa
4 The UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion and Belief
5 When rights claims collide Principles to consider
Universal Declaration on Human Rights
(UDHR) 1948
bull Article 18 ldquoEveryone has the right to freedom of thought
conscience and religion this right includesfreedom either
alone or in community with others and in public or private
to manifest his religion or belief in teaching practice
worship and observancerdquo
bull Elements
ndash Freedom of thought and conscience
ndash Freedom to manifest religion (including teaching practice
worship and observance)
Genocide Convention
1948 (in force 1951) The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
specified acts committed with intention of destroying a religious group in whole or in part
Article 2
In the present Convention genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy in whole or in part a national ethnical racial or religious group as such
(a) Killing members of the group
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
Customary international law (jus cogens)
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) Article 18
1 Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion This right shall include freedom to have or adopt a religion or belief of his choice and freedom either individually or in community with others and in public or private to manifest his religion or belief in worship observance practice and teaching
2 No one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice
3 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
4 The states Parties to the present Covenant undertake to have respect for the liberty of parents and where applicable legal guardians to ensure the religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own convictionsldquo
Derogation and limitations All parts of the rights articulated in Article 18 are non-derogable including the right to
manifest religion or belief (Article 4 of the ICCPR)
There may be limitations on manifestation of religion or belief (Article 183) Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed
by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
The difference between ldquoderogationrdquo and ldquolimitationrdquo Derogation refers to suppression of a right in a time of emergency that threatens the life of the nation
The right to freedom to manifest a belief is are non-derogable but not absolute and may be subject to limitations
The right to freedom to hold a religious or other belief or opinion is absolute and cannot lawfully be subjected to limitation or derogation
In the case of manifestation of religion or belief the practical distinction between derogation (temporary and only in time of emergency) and limitation (usually permanent but strictly limited) may not be easily evident (See Criddle)
Limitations must be Prescribed by law
Necessary to protect public safety order health or morals
fundamental rights and freedoms of others
See the Siracusa Principles
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Overview of this presentation 1 United nations instruments and treaties
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
The Genocide Convention
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief
2 Strict limitations on the right to freedom of conscience religion or belief
The Siricusa Principles
3 Regional human rights systems
Europe the Americas and Africa
4 The UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion and Belief
5 When rights claims collide Principles to consider
Universal Declaration on Human Rights
(UDHR) 1948
bull Article 18 ldquoEveryone has the right to freedom of thought
conscience and religion this right includesfreedom either
alone or in community with others and in public or private
to manifest his religion or belief in teaching practice
worship and observancerdquo
bull Elements
ndash Freedom of thought and conscience
ndash Freedom to manifest religion (including teaching practice
worship and observance)
Genocide Convention
1948 (in force 1951) The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
specified acts committed with intention of destroying a religious group in whole or in part
Article 2
In the present Convention genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy in whole or in part a national ethnical racial or religious group as such
(a) Killing members of the group
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
Customary international law (jus cogens)
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) Article 18
1 Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion This right shall include freedom to have or adopt a religion or belief of his choice and freedom either individually or in community with others and in public or private to manifest his religion or belief in worship observance practice and teaching
2 No one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice
3 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
4 The states Parties to the present Covenant undertake to have respect for the liberty of parents and where applicable legal guardians to ensure the religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own convictionsldquo
Derogation and limitations All parts of the rights articulated in Article 18 are non-derogable including the right to
manifest religion or belief (Article 4 of the ICCPR)
There may be limitations on manifestation of religion or belief (Article 183) Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed
by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
The difference between ldquoderogationrdquo and ldquolimitationrdquo Derogation refers to suppression of a right in a time of emergency that threatens the life of the nation
The right to freedom to manifest a belief is are non-derogable but not absolute and may be subject to limitations
The right to freedom to hold a religious or other belief or opinion is absolute and cannot lawfully be subjected to limitation or derogation
In the case of manifestation of religion or belief the practical distinction between derogation (temporary and only in time of emergency) and limitation (usually permanent but strictly limited) may not be easily evident (See Criddle)
Limitations must be Prescribed by law
Necessary to protect public safety order health or morals
fundamental rights and freedoms of others
See the Siracusa Principles
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Universal Declaration on Human Rights
(UDHR) 1948
bull Article 18 ldquoEveryone has the right to freedom of thought
conscience and religion this right includesfreedom either
alone or in community with others and in public or private
to manifest his religion or belief in teaching practice
worship and observancerdquo
bull Elements
ndash Freedom of thought and conscience
ndash Freedom to manifest religion (including teaching practice
worship and observance)
Genocide Convention
1948 (in force 1951) The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
specified acts committed with intention of destroying a religious group in whole or in part
Article 2
In the present Convention genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy in whole or in part a national ethnical racial or religious group as such
(a) Killing members of the group
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
Customary international law (jus cogens)
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) Article 18
1 Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion This right shall include freedom to have or adopt a religion or belief of his choice and freedom either individually or in community with others and in public or private to manifest his religion or belief in worship observance practice and teaching
2 No one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice
3 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
4 The states Parties to the present Covenant undertake to have respect for the liberty of parents and where applicable legal guardians to ensure the religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own convictionsldquo
Derogation and limitations All parts of the rights articulated in Article 18 are non-derogable including the right to
manifest religion or belief (Article 4 of the ICCPR)
There may be limitations on manifestation of religion or belief (Article 183) Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed
by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
The difference between ldquoderogationrdquo and ldquolimitationrdquo Derogation refers to suppression of a right in a time of emergency that threatens the life of the nation
The right to freedom to manifest a belief is are non-derogable but not absolute and may be subject to limitations
The right to freedom to hold a religious or other belief or opinion is absolute and cannot lawfully be subjected to limitation or derogation
In the case of manifestation of religion or belief the practical distinction between derogation (temporary and only in time of emergency) and limitation (usually permanent but strictly limited) may not be easily evident (See Criddle)
Limitations must be Prescribed by law
Necessary to protect public safety order health or morals
fundamental rights and freedoms of others
See the Siracusa Principles
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Genocide Convention
1948 (in force 1951) The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
specified acts committed with intention of destroying a religious group in whole or in part
Article 2
In the present Convention genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy in whole or in part a national ethnical racial or religious group as such
(a) Killing members of the group
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
Customary international law (jus cogens)
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) Article 18
1 Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion This right shall include freedom to have or adopt a religion or belief of his choice and freedom either individually or in community with others and in public or private to manifest his religion or belief in worship observance practice and teaching
2 No one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice
3 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
4 The states Parties to the present Covenant undertake to have respect for the liberty of parents and where applicable legal guardians to ensure the religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own convictionsldquo
Derogation and limitations All parts of the rights articulated in Article 18 are non-derogable including the right to
manifest religion or belief (Article 4 of the ICCPR)
There may be limitations on manifestation of religion or belief (Article 183) Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed
by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
The difference between ldquoderogationrdquo and ldquolimitationrdquo Derogation refers to suppression of a right in a time of emergency that threatens the life of the nation
The right to freedom to manifest a belief is are non-derogable but not absolute and may be subject to limitations
The right to freedom to hold a religious or other belief or opinion is absolute and cannot lawfully be subjected to limitation or derogation
In the case of manifestation of religion or belief the practical distinction between derogation (temporary and only in time of emergency) and limitation (usually permanent but strictly limited) may not be easily evident (See Criddle)
Limitations must be Prescribed by law
Necessary to protect public safety order health or morals
fundamental rights and freedoms of others
See the Siracusa Principles
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) Article 18
1 Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion This right shall include freedom to have or adopt a religion or belief of his choice and freedom either individually or in community with others and in public or private to manifest his religion or belief in worship observance practice and teaching
2 No one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice
3 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
4 The states Parties to the present Covenant undertake to have respect for the liberty of parents and where applicable legal guardians to ensure the religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own convictionsldquo
Derogation and limitations All parts of the rights articulated in Article 18 are non-derogable including the right to
manifest religion or belief (Article 4 of the ICCPR)
There may be limitations on manifestation of religion or belief (Article 183) Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed
by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
The difference between ldquoderogationrdquo and ldquolimitationrdquo Derogation refers to suppression of a right in a time of emergency that threatens the life of the nation
The right to freedom to manifest a belief is are non-derogable but not absolute and may be subject to limitations
The right to freedom to hold a religious or other belief or opinion is absolute and cannot lawfully be subjected to limitation or derogation
In the case of manifestation of religion or belief the practical distinction between derogation (temporary and only in time of emergency) and limitation (usually permanent but strictly limited) may not be easily evident (See Criddle)
Limitations must be Prescribed by law
Necessary to protect public safety order health or morals
fundamental rights and freedoms of others
See the Siracusa Principles
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Derogation and limitations All parts of the rights articulated in Article 18 are non-derogable including the right to
manifest religion or belief (Article 4 of the ICCPR)
There may be limitations on manifestation of religion or belief (Article 183) Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed
by law and are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others
The difference between ldquoderogationrdquo and ldquolimitationrdquo Derogation refers to suppression of a right in a time of emergency that threatens the life of the nation
The right to freedom to manifest a belief is are non-derogable but not absolute and may be subject to limitations
The right to freedom to hold a religious or other belief or opinion is absolute and cannot lawfully be subjected to limitation or derogation
In the case of manifestation of religion or belief the practical distinction between derogation (temporary and only in time of emergency) and limitation (usually permanent but strictly limited) may not be easily evident (See Criddle)
Limitations must be Prescribed by law
Necessary to protect public safety order health or morals
fundamental rights and freedoms of others
See the Siracusa Principles
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or
Belief (General Assembly 1981)
right to freedom of thought conscience and religion
no discrimination because of beliefs
bull Article 2 definition of intolerance and discrimination based on religion or beliefldquo ndash ldquoany distinction exclusion restriction or preference based on religion or belief
and having as its purpose or as its effect nullification or impairment of the recognition enjoyment or exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms on an equal basis
bull Article 3 ndash discrimination on grounds of religion or believe ldquoan affront to human dignity
and a disavowal of the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and an obstacle to friendly and peaceful relations between nationsrdquo
bull Declaration reaffirmed in 1997 declaration also mentions ICCPR Article 18
bull BUT there is no Convention The Declaration is not binding on States
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
What are ldquofundamental rights amp freedomsrdquo Is there a ldquohierarchyrdquo of norms
National law does features hierarchies (eg constitutions that are superior to ordinary laws)
Some commentators suggest an emerging hierarchy but this is disputed
UN Charter UDHR ICCPR CERD CEDAW use the following terms interchangeably human rights freedoms fundamental human rights fundamental
freedoms rights and freedomsrdquo human rights and fundamental freedomsrdquo (Meron 1986 5)
Indivisibility and interdependence of norms (Koji 2001 918))
If there is a hierarchy which are ldquofundamentalrdquo norms (subjective politicallyculturally defined no consensus) jus cogens norms (peremptory norms)
Other customary norms
Non-derogable rights (see Koji 2001)
What about non-derogable rights that are subject to limitations (eg ICCPR Art 183)
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comments and Jurisprudence
HRC General Comment No 22 the rights to freedoms of conscience and religion are ldquofar-reaching
and profoundrdquo (para 1) and include ldquotheistic non-theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief rdquo (para 2)
ldquothe practice and teaching of religion or belief includes acts integral to the conduct by religious groups of their basic affairs such as the freedom to choose their religious leaders priests and teachers the freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools and the freedom to prepare and distribute religious texts or publicationsrdquo (para 4)
General Comment No 22 The right to freedom of thought conscience and religion ( Art 18) 07301993 CCPRC21Rev1Add4 General Comment No 22 (General Comments) httpwwwunhchrchtbsdocnsf09a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
UN Human Rights Committee
General Comment 22 No limitation on right to freedoms of thought conscience and
belief ldquono one can be compelled to reveal his thoughts or adherence to a religion or beliefrdquo para 3
Article 18(3) is to be ldquostrictly interpretedrdquo and that any limitations ldquomust be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicatedrdquo
ldquoLimitations imposed must be established by law and must not be applied in a manner that would vitiate the rights guaranteed in article 18 The Committee observes that paragraph 3 of article 18 is to be strictly interpreted restrictions are not allowed on grounds not specified there even if they would be allowed as restrictions to other rights protected in the Covenant such as national security Limitations may be applied only for those purposes for which they were prescribed and must be directly related and proportionate to the specific need on which they are predicated Restrictions may not be imposed for discriminatory purposes or applied in a discriminatory mannerrdquo
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)
Siracusa Principles Article 18(3) limitations are permissible if they
Are permitted within the terms of the ICCPR itself no limitation based on grounds other than stipulated (iethe ldquomanifestationrdquo of religion)
prescribed by law (either common law or legislation)
compatible with the rule of law
not arbitrary or discriminatory in scope
sufficiently precise and
accessible to those whose practices will be affected
Siracusa principles Article 36 When a conflict exists between a right protected in the Covenant and
one which is not recognition and consideration should be given to the fact that the Covenant seeks to protect the most fundamental rights and freedoms In this context especial weight should be afforded to rights not subject to limitations in the Covenant
United Nations Economic and Social Council Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights UN Doc ECN419854 Annex (1985) available at httpwww1umneduhumanrtsinstreesiracusaprincipleshtml
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action
Article 5
All human rights are universal indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated The international
community must treat human rights globally in a fair and
equal manner on the same footing and with the same
emphasis
UN General Assembly Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action 12 July
1993 ACONF15723 available at
httpwwwrefworldorgdocid3ae6b39echtml
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
American Convention on Human Rights
Article 1
1 The States Parties to this Convention undertake to respect the
rights and freedoms recognized herein and to ensure to all
persons subject to their jurisdiction the free and full exercise of
those rights and freedoms without any discrimination for
reasons of race color sex language religion political or other
opinion national or social origin economic status birth or
any other social condition
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
American Convention on Human Rights
ARTICLE 12 FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION
1Everyone has the right to freedom of conscience and of religion This right includes freedom to maintain or to change ones religion or beliefs and freedom to profess or disseminate ones religion or beliefs either individually or together with others in public or in private
2 No one shall be subject to restrictions that might impair his freedom to maintain or to change his religion or beliefs
3Freedom to manifest ones religion and beliefs may be subject only to the limitations prescribed by law that are necessary to protect public safety order health or morals or the rights or freedoms of others
4Parents or guardians as the case may be have the right to provide for the religious and moral education of their children or wards that is in accord with their own convictions
Article 27 provides that Article 12 is non-derogable
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 9 - Freedom of thought conscience and religion
1 Everyone has the right to freedom of thought conscience and religion this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief and freedom either alone or in community with others and in public or private and to manifest his religion or belief in worship teaching practice and observance
2 Freedom to manifest ones religion or beliefs shall be subject only to such limitations as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society in the interests of public safety for the protection of public order health or morals or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
Article 9 is not among the non-derogable articles
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
European Convention on Human Rights
Article 14 ndash Prohibition of discrimination
The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any
ground such as sex race colour language religion political or
other opinion national or social origin association with a
national minority property birth or other status
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
European Court of Human Rights
Dahlab v Switzerland (2001) headscarf worn by a teacher could have a proselytizing effect and the ban was not unreasonable
Sahin v Turkey ECtHR 2005 Turkeyrsquos refusal to allow Islamic headscarf was justified and proportional
Dogru v France (2005) national policy banning headscarves in school phys-ed classes for reasons of healthsafety was not unreasonable interference with freedom of religion
Lautsi v Italy (2011) Grand chamber overruled Chamberrsquos decision and said passive display of crucifix in classroom was not incompatible with freedom of religion saying Dahlab reasoning didnrsquot apply
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
African Charter on Human
and Peoples Rights ARTICLE 2
Every individual shall be entitled to the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the present Charter without distinction of any kind such as race ethnic group colour sex language religion political or any other opinion national and social origin fortune birth or any status
ARTICLE 8
Freedom of conscience the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed No one may subject to law and order be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms
There is no derogation clause in the Charter
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Concerns Persecution of particular religious groups (amp their advocates)
ndash Minority religious groups in Pakistan Vietnam Iran Belarus China amp other places
Limitations on manifestation of religion or belief in the public sphere
ndash Minaret ban (Switzerland)
ndash Bans on the veil in several countries in Europe
ndash Bans on religious symbols in Canada
Violence between members of different religionsreligious groups
ndash Muslims and Christians in Nigeria
ndash Sectarian violence in Iraq
Freedom of religion and hellip
ndash Freedom of expression (Muhammad cartoons controversy)
ndash Womenrsquos rights (conflict over Sharirsquoa in Ontario Canada)
ndash Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI)
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
When Rights Claims Collide
Principles to Consider
All rights are indivisible
Right to freedoms of conscience religion and belief are
non-derogable in UN system (ICCPR)
non-derogable in the Inter-American human rights system
derogable in times of emergency in the European regional human rights system
Right to freedom of conscience is absolute
Right to freedoms of religion and manifestation of religion are subject to very
strict limitations (Siracusa principles)
The starting point is human beings the rights holders are human beings (not
religions) (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Freedom of religion and belief requires freedom of expression ndash and the freedom
to engage in ldquopeaceful provocationrdquo (Heiner Bielefeldt)
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Mandate created by UN Human Rights Council in 1986
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt was the mandate holder from August
2010 to October 2016
Mr Ahmed Shaheed was appointed as the mandate holder in
November 2016
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Prof Heiner Bielefeldt
UN Special Rapporteur on
Freedom of Religion and Belief
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=nAX9ynl3Lt4 (17 minutes)
bull httpswwwyoutubecomwatchv=Kgoagl9AMAE (49 minutes)
bull httpwebtvunorgwatchheiner-bielefeldt-special-rapporteur-on-freedom-of-
religion-or-belief-E28093-press-conference2781753909001page=5
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
References and readings Bielefeldt Heiner 2013 Misperceptions of Freedom of Religion or Belief Human Rights Quarterly
35(1)(2013) 33-68 Available online
Bielefeldt Heiner 2012 Freedom of Religion or BeliefmdashA Human Right under Pressure Ox J Law Religion 35(1)(2012) 33-68 Available online Janis Mark Weston ldquoReligion and International Lawrdquo (November 2002) ASIL Insights httpwwwasilorginsigh93cfm
Heiner Bielefeldt Nazila Ghanea and Michael Wiener 2016 Freedom of Religion or Belief An International Law Commentary Oxford Oxford University Press
Gerald L Neuman 2016 ldquoConstrained Derogation in Positive Human Rights Regimes In Human Rights in Emergencies edited by Evan J Criddle Oxford OUP pp 21-24
Danchin Peter G 2008 ldquoOf Prophets and Proselytes Freedom of Religion and the Conflict of Rights in International Law 49 Harv Intl LJ 249 (2008)
Koji Teraya 2001 ldquoEmerging Hierarchy in International Human Rights and Beyond From the Perspective of Non-derogable Rightsrdquo European Journal of International Law EJIL 12 (2001) 917-941
Lerner Natan 2006 Religion Secular Beliefs and Human Rights Second Revised Edition Netherlands Martinus Nijhoff
Meron Theodor 1986 ldquoOn a Hierarchy of International Human Rightsrdquo 80 Am J Intl L 1 (1986)
University of Minnesota Human Rights Center Study Guide Freedom of Religion or Belief 2003 httpwww1umneduhumanrtsedumatstudyguidesreligionhtml
Trigg Roger 2012 Equality Freedom and Religion Oxford OUP
Reservations Limitations and Derogations lecture notes 2006 httpwwwuionostudieremnerjushumanrightsHUMR5120h06undervisningsmaterialeLecture_notes_Maria_reservations_limitations_and_derogationsdoc
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights
Some Journals International Journal for Religious Freedom
httpwwwiirfeuindexphpid=30ampL=
Journal of Church and State httpjcsoxfordjournalsorg
Journal of Law Religion and State httpbooksandjournalsbrillonlinecomcontentjournals1011632212481
12x639757
Oxford Journal of Law and Religion httpojlroxfordjournalsorg
Religion amp Human Rights httpwwwbrillcomreligion-human-rights